PHIL 224, Week 9: Forests
Announcements
Nov. 22, guest lecture, Thomas Homer-Dixon, Ethics of Climate Change.
Nov. 24, Assignment 3 due (hydraulic fracturing, wind farms). Instructions.
Dec. 1, Exam 3, in class. No final exam.
Structure: same as exam 1, 4 short answers and short essay. Only weeks 9-12 are covered.
Review questions are available at the end of the lecture notes.
How to do well:
- Come to class and pay attention.
- Do not use laptops or other electronics, for these reasons.
- Read the text carefully and critically.
- Prepare detailed answers to review questions.
Forestry and Climate Change
Question from last week: How many people should there be in the world?
Why do forests matter?
Pine forests in B.C. are being wiped out by pine beetles: CBC article.
The spread is the result of forest management and climate warming (warmth, droughts).
Feedback loop: warming -> beetles -> carbon increases -> warming.
More on forests and climate change (UN).
Web site on climate progress.
Forest Values (Drengson & Taylor)
Issues: logging, clearcutting.
Reject jobs vs. environment conflict: sustainable communities are parts of healthy biophysical systems.
Instrumentalists vs. intrinsic value view of nature.
Natural entities have rights to evolve.
Principles of deep ecology:
- Nonhuman life has value in itself.
- Richness of diversity of life forms.
- Humans have no right to reduce richness and diversity.
- Decrease of human population is desirable.
- Humans interfere too much with nature.
- Policies must change.
- Quality of life matters more than standard of living.
- Obligation to implement changes.
Applications to ecoforestry (selection from 16):
- Retention of trees, riparian (water-related) zones.
- No clearcutting.
- Allow the forest to regenerate.
- Prohibit pesticides.
- Local control, e.g. aboriginal peoples.
- Maintain beauty.
Canadian Forest Policy (Peter Miller)
Rejects view of forests as industrial resource (John Locke).
Alternative: love and respect Mother Earth.
Gaia hypothesis: earth as a single living entity.
Evidence-based environmentalism vs. ecomysticism.
Canada Forest Accord. Forests are part of Canadian identity.
Connections with wildlife policy.
Barriere Lake (Shenkier and Meredith)
Issues about Barriere Lake:
- Aboriginal land rights and benefits.
- Forestry and mining practices.
- Local management: direct democracy vs. band councils.
How Algonquin values about nature differ from Euro-American ones:
- Intrinsic vs. instrumental view of nature.
- Land ethics: promote integrity, stability, and beauty of the biotic community.
- Human and non-human communities interconnect.
- Need to sustain the environment, using myth, ritual, and social community.
- Conflicts with commercial forestry and mining interests.
Why do people deny that climate change is a serious environmental problem?
Ignorance: people don't know the evidence
Motivated inference: goals bias beliefs: see my August blog post.
Anxiety-driven inference avoidance: see my October blog post.
Review Questions for Week 9
- According to Drengson and Taylor, there are 16 principles of ecoforestry. State 5 that you think are most important.
- What does Miller think are Locke's mistakes concerning the value of nature? Explain 4 with respect to forests.
- According to Shenkier and Meredith, what are 4 main ways in which Algonquin values differ from commercial/industrial ones?
- Essay: From the ethical perspectives of consequences and rights, what limits should be placed on commercial forestry practices?
- statement of at least two alternatives
- consequences pro and con, and evaluation
- rights and duties, pro and con, and evaluation
- overall evaluation.
Paul
Thagard
Computational Epistemology
Laboratory.
This page updated Nov. 9, 2011